Difference between revisions of "Bracka School"

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Eastern Slavic languages have been [[lingua franca]] in Eastern Europe for centuries. Particularly, predecessors of Belarusian, Russian, and Ukrainian languages dominated in the majority of lands of Great Duchy of Lithuania. So did the Eastern Orthodox church. However, this duchy itself was formally a part of the greater Polish state called Rzeczpospolita. That greater state promoted the Catholic church and Polish language. Notably, this promotion could be seen in education. For instance, the public schools in Great Duchy of Lithuania used Polish language, not Eastern Slavic ones.
 
Eastern Slavic languages have been [[lingua franca]] in Eastern Europe for centuries. Particularly, predecessors of Belarusian, Russian, and Ukrainian languages dominated in the majority of lands of Great Duchy of Lithuania. So did the Eastern Orthodox church. However, this duchy itself was formally a part of the greater Polish state called Rzeczpospolita. That greater state promoted the Catholic church and Polish language. Notably, this promotion could be seen in education. For instance, the public schools in Great Duchy of Lithuania used Polish language, not Eastern Slavic ones.
  
To reflect these divergences, Polish nobleman of Eastern Slavic descent and Eastern Orthodox Konstanty Wasyl Ostrogski opened Ostroh Academy in Ostroh, Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth in 1576. This academy is now considered being the first institution of higher education in Ukraine. Without doubts, it influenced the wave of ''fellowship schools'' that followed shortly.
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To reflect these divergences, Polish nobleman of Eastern Slavic descent and Eastern Orthodox Konstanty Wasyl Ostrohski opened Ostroh Academy in Ostroh, Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth in 1576. This academy is now considered being the first institution of higher education in Ukraine. Without doubts, it influenced the wave of ''fellowship schools'' that followed shortly.
  
  
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Fraternal Orthodox schools were opened in Brest (1591), Mogilev (1590–1592), Minsk (1612), Polotsk (1633), Vilna and other cities [1].
 
Fraternal Orthodox schools were opened in Brest (1591), Mogilev (1590–1592), Minsk (1612), Polotsk (1633), Vilna and other cities [1].
 
see also
 
see also
 
  
 
==Related coursework==
 
==Related coursework==

Revision as of 14:18, 28 December 2018

Bracka School (alternatively spelled as Bratska School or Bratska Shkola; Cyrillic: Брацка школа or, literally, Brotherhood School, Fraternal School or Fellowship School) is a community-based educational initiative originated in the end of XVI century in Grand Duchy of Lithuania, Eastern Europe.


History

Eastern Slavic languages have been lingua franca in Eastern Europe for centuries. Particularly, predecessors of Belarusian, Russian, and Ukrainian languages dominated in the majority of lands of Great Duchy of Lithuania. So did the Eastern Orthodox church. However, this duchy itself was formally a part of the greater Polish state called Rzeczpospolita. That greater state promoted the Catholic church and Polish language. Notably, this promotion could be seen in education. For instance, the public schools in Great Duchy of Lithuania used Polish language, not Eastern Slavic ones.

To reflect these divergences, Polish nobleman of Eastern Slavic descent and Eastern Orthodox Konstanty Wasyl Ostrohski opened Ostroh Academy in Ostroh, Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth in 1576. This academy is now considered being the first institution of higher education in Ukraine. Without doubts, it influenced the wave of fellowship schools that followed shortly.



Fraternal schools in the Grand Duchy of Lithuania are educational institutions created by church brotherhoods. The fraternal schools of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania were closely connected with the fraternal schools of the Russian and Belz voivodeships of Poland (especially the Lviv Assumption fraternal school), the Ostrog Academy, the Kiev-Mohyla Collegium, the fraternal schools of the lands of Ukraine that were torn away from the Grand Duchy of Lithuania according to the Lublin Union.

Education system

At the head of the school was the rector, the teachers (didaskaly) were elected at fraternity meetings. Fraternal schools had 3-5 classes, they were general-class. After receiving the initial training, students began to study the "seven liberal arts". Church Slavonic (his Belarusian (West Russian) izvod), Greek, Latin, Polish, Belarusian (the state language of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania) languages, works of ancient thinkers, dialectics, rhetoric, music were studied. Students also received some knowledge of arithmetic, geometry, astronomy, and geography. The pedagogical system of schools was formed under a certain influence of humanistic and reformational ideas, Jesuit colleges.

In fraternal schools, a class-less system of instruction was used, in which the catechic method of teaching was dominant, built on questions and answers. For didactic purposes, theatrical performances were organized, fraternal schools provided for the organization of the choir and music education.

Many students later became well-known scientists, public figures, teachers. Teachers in fraternal schools were church and public figures, polemic writers S. Zizany and L. Zizany, M. Smotrytsky, L. Karpovich, S. Nosov, S. Polotsky and others. Fraternal schools of the territory of Belarus and Ukraine Main article: Fraternal schools

In the 16th — 17th centuries, Orthodox fraternal schools played an important role in the development of education in the territory of modern Belarus and Ukraine, and had the goal of opposing the Catholic Church.

Fraternal Orthodox schools were opened in Brest (1591), Mogilev (1590–1592), Minsk (1612), Polotsk (1633), Vilna and other cities [1]. see also

Related coursework